Wake Forest head coach Jeff Bzdelik gives instructions to his players from the sidelines during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Tennessee in Paradise Island, Bahamas, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013. (AP Photo/Bahamas Visual Services, Tim Aylen)

Tennessee's Josh Richardson attempts a long distance shot as Wake Forest's Codi Miller-Mclntyre, right, looks on during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Paradise Island, Bahamas, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013. Tennessee won 82-63. (AP Photo/Bahamas Visual Services, Tim Aylen)

Tennessee's Jarnell Stokes, right, goes up for the basket as Wake Forest's Tyler Cavanaugh defends during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Paradise Island, Bahamas, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013. Tennessee won 82-63. (AP Photo/Bahamas Visual Services, Tim Aylen)

Tennessee's Jarnell Stokes, right, searches for a teammate to pass the ball to as Wake Forest's Travis Mckie defends during the during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Paradise Island, Bahamas, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013. Tennessee won 82-63. (AP Photo/Bahamas Visual Services, Tim Aylen)

Vanderbilt players celebrate after beating Wake Forest 23-21 in an NCAA college football game on Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013, in Nashville, Tenn. The win gave Vanderbilt their second straight 8-4 season. It is the first time the team has posted consecutive eight-win seasons since 1927 and 1928. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

PARADISE ISLAND, Bahamas (AP) — Tennessee was sputtering after its debut in the Battle 4 Atlantis. The Volunteers are heading home with a slew of newfound momentum.

Jarnell Stokes scored a season-high 21 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, Darius Thompson scored 16 and Tennessee beat Wake Forest 82-63 on Saturday in the fifth-place game at the tournament in the Bahamas.

"Good team win," Tennessee coach Cuonzo Martin said. "Coming off a tough loss the first night, I didn't think we played well on either end of the floor. But our guys did a tremendous job of bouncing back. Really, a lot of credit to our guys for bouncing back after that first game."

Stokes needed only nine shots from the floor to get his 21 points, and his 10 boards were twice as many as the total posted by any Wake Forest player.

"My mindset coming out is never to score," Stokes said. "If someone is open and it's not my time to score, I won't try to. I come into every game just trying to play defense and get as many rebounds as I can."

In the Bahamas, that's exactly what Stokes did: three games, three double-doubles.

Jordan McRae scored 10 points for the Volunteers (5-2), who controlled play throughout. Tennessee outscored Wake Forest 40-26 in the paint, and held a 34-28 rebounding edge in the first matchup between the schools in nearly 43 years.

Wake Forest lost to No. 2 Kansas to open the tournament, then beat Southern California on Friday.

"We had three experiences here. We had the decent, the very good, and the ugly," Wake Forest coach Jeff Bzdelik said. "And we need to, as a team, understand why each experience happened and to draw from that. We played a team today that is a very mature, physical basketball team. They threw the first punch, put us on our heels and we did not control our emotions."

The game was chippy, sometimes mildly heated, with the teams combining for 50 personal fouls and 60 free-throw attempts.

Tennessee's first game in the Bahamas was a late-night loss Thursday to Texas-El Paso, an outing that left Martin lamenting how his team was misfiring in a number of areas.

A night of short sleep followed, and Tennessee got right in a hurry. The Volunteers won their last two games in the tournament by a combined 34 points, and Stokes had the 22nd double-double of his 57-game Tennessee career.

"That's what I try to do every game," Stokes said.

Tennessee wasn't just hurting Wake Forest inside, the Vols were even hurting each other — so to speak. After Jeronne Maymon scored with 18:11 to put his team up 50-34, he slapped five with Vols' guard Antonio Barton.

Maymon left that exchange smiling.

Barton left it smarting, shaking his hand after a particularly hard smack from his teammate.

The win came in Tennessee's first of three games against Atlantic Coast Conference teams in the coming weeks. Tennessee plays host to North Carolina State on Dec. 18 and Virginia on Dec. 30.

Tennessee is off until it plays host to Tennessee Tech on Dec. 7. Wake Forest resumes its schedule against Tulane on Dec. 4, and Bzdelik already was sounding eager to get back on the floor.

"A loss is really a loss if you don't learn something from it," Bzdelik said.